| PIPECLAY | Fine white clay used in making tobacco pipes and pottery and in whitening leather. |
| KAOLIN | Fine white clay used in making porcelain ware (6) |
| BRIAR | Rise early in the bar for making tobacco pipes |
| SLIP | Undergarment resembling a long or knee-length camisole; a pillow case; or, liquefied suspension of clay particles in water used in ceramics and pottery-making (4) |
| SPODE | A pauper's son, orphaned aged six, who founded a porcelain and pottery factory in 1776 that developed bone china and produced blue-and-white overglaze bat-printed wares still sold and collectable toda |
| CHINA | _ clay, a fine white clay also called kaolin (5) |
| UMBER | From "shadow", natural brown clay used in oil paints and watercolours (5) |
| MEERSCHAUM | Clay mineral also called sepiolite used to make tobacco pipes |
| MEERSCHAUMS | Fine clay tobacco pipes (11) |
| TILES | Thin slabs of concrete or baked clay used in series for covering floor, a roof, pavement |
| FULLERSEARTH | Type of clay used in the production of cloth (7,5) |
| HANDICRAFTS | Frantic dash for repair in eg embroidery and pottery (11) |
| CLAY | Material used for making pottery and bricks |
| LEACH | Which English potter reinvigorated pottery by introducing oriental design, techniques and glazes at his St Ives pottery and wrote A Potter's Book (1945) |
| SIENNA | Clay used in pigments |
| PASTE | Clay used in porcelain |
| EASTCHINASEA | No trouble covering stone and pottery with a mass of water |
| STORMINA | Arrive in a fury with a piece of pottery and make a fuss about nothing (5,2,1,6) |
| TEACUP | Arrive in a fury with a piece of pottery and make a fuss about nothing (5,2,1,6) |
| MINTON | Caughley engraver who founded a Staffordshire pottery and devised for Spode the Broseley Blue Dragon and Willow patterns (6) |